Technology museum

A technology museum is a museum devoted to applied science and technological developments.[1] Many museums are both a science museum and a technology museum, and incorporate elements of both museum genres. The goal of technology museums is to educate the public on the history of technology, and to preserve technological heritage.[2] They also may aim to promote local pride in technological and industrial developments, such as the manufacturing materials on display at the Newcastle Discovery Museum.[2] Some technology museums may simply want to display technological items, while others may want to use them to demonstrate how they function.
Examples of Technology Museums

Some of the most historically significant technology museums are:
- the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris, founded in 1794;
- the Science Museum in London, founded in 1857;[2]
- the Deutsches Museum von Meisterwerken der Naturwissenschaft und Technik in Munich, founded in 1903; and
- the Technisches Museum für Industrie und Gewerbein Vienna, founded in 1918.
- the Computer History Museum in California, founded in the 1970s.
Further technology museums in Germany include the
Technology on Display in Museums
Many other independent museums, such as
Museum Buildings and Structures

In some examples of this type of museum, the actual building is incorporated into the exhibition. A museum on mining technology may be housed inside a mining or colliery site, and a museum focusing on industrial technology might be inside a warehouse or former factory.[2] Many naval and maritime museums follow this trend, such as the Patriots Point Naval and Maritime Museum in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. The objects inside this museum are displayed inside the USS Yorktown – an aircraft carrier – and the USS Laffey—a destroyer.[5] By housing exhibits inside relevant buildings and other structures, museums can display technology that supports their concentrations.
References
- ^ "science/technology museum". standards.phorio.com. Phorio Systems Corporation. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
- ^ JSTOR 3107205.
- ^ Lackner, Helmut (2011). "Das technische Museum" [The technology museum]. Ferrum: Nachrichten aus der Eisenbibliothek (in German). 83: 7–20.
- JSTOR 48640682.
- JSTOR 10.1525/tph.2004.26.4.23.
See also
- Computer Museum